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In These Times: This Can Be Our Moment

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Raksha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 09:28 PM
Original message
In These Times: This Can Be Our Moment
This Can Be Our Moment
By Stephen Lerner

Working people are losing when we should be winning. Wall Street, the Koch brothers, greedy CEOs, and the super-rich have seized the economic crisis they created and are exploiting it. They are slashing public budgets; attacking nurses, teachers and firefighters; destroying public employee unions; and cutting healthcare, education, childcare and other critical community programs.

Their campaign will intensify as they dedicate themselves to destroying the remaining islands of private-sector union strength—slashing benefits and pay for all workers. Their goal: lock in their political and economic dominance. Their champions: politicians like Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and Ohio Governor John Kasich (a former Wall Street executive), Glenn Beck and others on the far right.

It doesn’t have to be this way. This can be our moment. The fragility of an unstable boom-and-bust economy and growing economic inequality create unique opportunities to stoke simmering discontent into concrete, concerted direct action to challenge corporate extremism. From Wisconsin, where hundreds of thousands of workers, students, clergy and others have rallied, to cities around the country where average Americans are occupying Wall Street banks to protest revenue shortfalls, the poisonous deals banks have with cities and states, and foreclosures, a movement is being born that challenges corporate dominance and is inspired by a vision of a better and more just world.

But in order to make this vision reality, we need to go on offense and make Wall Street pay for the trillions it stole from us. Wall Street is bankrupting cities, states, homeowners, and students with trillions in unfair debt, even after the big banks received $17 trillion in bailouts and backstops after crashing the economy. We can use our political and economic power to renegotiate our relationship with Wall Street to keep millions of people in their homes, and raise revenue for cities and states to protect jobs and critical services:

The Potential Power of Government—Don’t Do Business with Bandit Banks: Wall Street does trillions in business with all levels of government. Let’s leverage that money by getting governments to refuse to do business with banks that don’t pay their fair share in taxes, won’t renegotiate high-cost deals that are bankrupting taxpayers with astronomical interest rates, and refuse to stop foreclosures by reducing mortgage principals.

The Potential Power of Homeowners and Students—Don’t Pay Unfair Debt: Growing numbers of homeowners and students cannot afford to pay back their loans. If they organized a loan strike — refusing to pay their mortgages and student loans unless banks agreed to negotiate lower rates — it would threaten CEO bonuses and bottom lines of the banks. When corporations are in trouble they renegotiate their debt all the time so they can get on their feet again. Homeowners, students and local government need that same deal.

The Potential Power of Public Employee Unions—Bargaining to Protect Public Dollars: Public employee unions so far have been on the defensive, trying to stop cuts and concessions. Nurses, teachers, firefighters and others can go on the offensive by putting concrete proposals on the table that would save billions like demanding governments get out of the toxic interest rate swaps that are costing taxpayers at least $1.8 billion a year nationally, or making California renegotiate old loans to conform to the new law on universal credit ratings, which would save $21 billion. Imagine teachers, nurses, firefighters and police voting to strike in order to make the city or state use its power to protect taxpayers and public services while helping to stop foreclosures and stabilize the housing market and tax base.

<snip>

http://inthesetimes.com/article/7125/this_can_be_our_moment/


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MedleyMisty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 09:32 PM
Response to Original message
1. The Libyans thought it was their moment
Edited on Tue Mar-29-11 09:34 PM by MedleyMisty
Here's their vision of their future - http://english.aljazeera.net/mritems/Documents/2011/3/29/2011329113923943811The%20Interim%20Transitional%20National%20Council%20Statement.pdf

They wanted unions. They wanted health care. They wanted education. They wanted a livable wage.

That's why they're getting murdered by neglect. And Americans are cool with that. So there's no reason to think that working Americans care about anyone or anything or that they will stand up for themselves when they won't stand up for anyone else.

Good luck with getting anyone to care about anyone or to work together for any sort of future.
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RKP5637 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 09:50 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Most Americans today are about ME ME ME and unless something directly
affects them in a huge way they don't give a F. And the rest are too Stupid to get what's going on. I don't have much faith either in getting anyone to care about anyone or to work together for any sort of future. I'm just a realist. 8 years of Bush and Americans still don't get it ... and the last 2 years haven't exactly been rosy IMO.
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Raksha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 09:52 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Thanks for posting the Libyan International National Council's declaration.
I only had a quick look at it, but I promise I'll go back and read it more thoroughly later.

I think Americans do care, but feel helpless to take on the global corporations when it's become so obvious they have BOTH parties in their pockets. The difficulty as I see it is getting a critical mass of Americans to act in solidarity--like they did in Madison. The Koch think tanks, the corporate media and the astroturf teabagger groups are still playing the divide and conquer game very successfully.

People *ARE* waking up, but the big question for me is whether enough of them can wake up in time.
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RKP5637 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 10:08 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. I was probably too harsh in my post #2. What you've said is certainly a large
factor, people "feel helpless to take on the global corporations when it's become so obvious they have BOTH parties in their pockets."
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Raksha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 10:15 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Not to mention the fact that Republicans OWN the voting machines!
Edited on Tue Mar-29-11 10:21 PM by Raksha
Did you happen to see this?
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x766167

Florida governor Rick Scott only got a 32% approval rating and a 55% disapproval rating. He got elected by the slimmest margin even though he outspent his opponent 8 to 1. I don't believe for one minute the election wasn't rigged. And it's NOT like it hasn't happened in Florida before.

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RKP5637 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-29-11 10:46 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. No, I hadn't see it ... Thanks! I have only marginal faith that elections are honest anymore. There
are just too many shenanigans anymore and many politicians have little integrity today. And these parties are becoming in some cases more like criminal operations.

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logicrules Donating Member (1 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-30-11 02:30 PM
Response to Original message
7. Question...
"Don’t Pay Unfair Debt: Growing numbers of homeowners and students cannot afford to pay back their loans".

Can someone explain how debt is unfair because a debtor cannot afford to pay back the loan?
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